Lead, a heavy metal, is a wellknown contaminant in water and has been reported to cause serious
health implications to humans, animals, and plants. One of the processes for heavy metal remediationof contaminated water is chemical precipitation. In this present work, chemical precipitation of lead
from a contaminated aqueous matrix by chlorides, carbonates, and sulfates of sodium and calcium
was compared to lead removal by molecular sieves and biomaterials (fish-bone, grape and spinach).
The order of lead removal from 1400 ppm of lead solution is sodium chloride (31%) < calcium chloride
(62%) < burnt grape (83%) < charred spinach (92.3%) < sodium phosphate (95.8%) < sodium
carbonate (97%) < molecular sieve sphere (98.7%) < sodium sulfate (99.3%) < calcium sulfate
(99.7%) < molecular sieves ground (99.71%) < fishbone (99.87%) < calcium carbonate (99.9%).
Author(s) Details
Lovell Agwaramgbo
Department of Chemistry, School of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics, Dillard University, New Orleans,
USA.
ShaKayla Nunez
Department of Microbiology, Biochemistry, Immunology; Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA
Kayla Mitt
Dillard University Alum, New Orleans, Louisiana USA.
View Book :- http://bp.bookpi.org/index.php/bpi/catalog/book/231
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